Yahoo – AFP,
Bryan McManus, with Dario Thuburn in Donetsk, 29 July 2014
Brussels (AFP) - After months of hesitation, the EU agreed Tuesday to impose economic sanctions against Russia, hoping this "strong warning" would make it change course in Ukraine as fighting intensified around cities held by pro-Russian rebels.
A man
videos a shell crater in Donetsk, on July 29, 2014 (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)
|
Brussels (AFP) - After months of hesitation, the EU agreed Tuesday to impose economic sanctions against Russia, hoping this "strong warning" would make it change course in Ukraine as fighting intensified around cities held by pro-Russian rebels.
But at the
same time the European Union told Moscow that should it reconsider its policy
on Ukraine, the 28-nation bloc also could shift course, despite all the damage
done.
The new
measures impose restrictions on the finance, defence and energy sectors so as
to increase the cost to Russia of its continued intervention in Ukraine.
Russia's
President Vladimir Putin
attends a meeting in his Novo-
Ogaryovo residence
outside Moscow,
on July 29, 2014 (AFP Photo/Mikhail
Klimentyev)
|
The
measures are "a strong warning (that the) illegal annexation of (Crimea)
and deliberate destabilisation of a neighbouring sovereign country cannot be
accepted in 21st century Europe," said Herman Van Rompuy, president of the
European Council.
If Russia
does not change direction, "it will find itself increasingly isolated by
its own actions," Van Rompuy said in a statement.
"The
European Union will fulfil its obligations to protect and ensure the security
of its citizens. And the European Union will stand by its neighbours and
partners," the statement added, apparently referring to other ex-Soviet
states now EU partners Georgia and Moldova.
The EU
however "remains ready to reverse its decisions and re-engage with Russia
when it starts contributing actively and without ambiguities to finding a
solution," he added.
For months since the crisis broke in November, the EU had restricted itself to so-called 'Phase 2' asset freezes and visa bans on those implicated in or profiting from the Ukraine crisis.
Sanctions
'inevitable'
Debris from
Malaysia Airlines flight MH17
lies at the crash site in rebel-held east
Ukraine, on July 19, 2014 (AFP Photo/
Alexander Khudoteply)
|
The loss of
Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, however, dramatically changed thinking, even
among holdouts such as Germany and Italy, and put broad 'Phase 3' economic
sanctions at the top of the EU agenda.
"The
decision today was inevitable," German Chancellor Angela Merkel said in a
statement that also urged the Russian leadership to "pursue the path of
de-escalation and cooperation" in the Ukraine conflict, warning of further
steps if it does not.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry said separately that Washington was also
"preparing additional sanctions, with Europe," adding that Russian
President Vladimir Putin "still has a choice" in what course to take
in Ukraine.
The EU
ambassadors also agreed Tuesday to impose asset freezes and visa bans on four
close Putin business associates, the first time the bloc has targeted such
figures, with another four people and three companies also targeted.
Details of
their names will be made available in the EU's Official Journal, probably
Wednesday, with the new sanctions likely to come into force Friday or Saturday
once the legal procedures are completed.
Moscow has
consistently derided the US and EU sanctions, condemning them as ineffective
and counterproductive to shared interests in such key areas as the fight
against terrorism.
"I can
assure you that we will overcome any difficulties that develop in various
sectors of the economy and maybe we will become more independent and confident
in our own strength," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Monday.
People come
out from their houses
after shelling in Donetsk, on July 29,
2014 (AFP Photo/Bulent
Kilic)
|
An EU diplomat cautioned that as sanctions increase, Putin may feel he has less to lose and it should not be forgotten the Russian leader has many options.
"He
could take military action, he could increase help for the rebels, he could
help them bring down Ukraine government planes," the diplomat said.
Fighting
by MH17 crash site
Another EU
diplomat played down this possibility, saying the bloc's leaders will have
taken it into account when they agreed to up the ante with Putin.
"Putin
is going to try and divide the Europeans and his response will be a test of the
EU's unity," the diplomat said.
Western
sanctions in the past have proven controversial, failing to deliver results as
quickly as hoped in such cases as Cuba and Zimbabwe, countries that suffered
badly but also learned how to get around many of the restrictions.
Heavy
shelling was reported Tuesday in eastern Ukraine, forcing international experts
to again scrap plans to reach the MH17 crash site.
Ukrainian
servicemen sitting atop armored
personnel carriers travel near the
eastern city
of Slavyansk on July 11,
2014 (AFP Photo/Genya Savilov)
|
The
Ukrainian military said they were not involved in hostilities in the area,
charging instead that insurgents were firing on their positions from nearby
towns.
Key
rebel-held cities further afield came under heavy bombardment, as the
government pushed its offensive to regain control of the eastern industrial
heartland.
In Donetsk
-- the biggest rebel stronghold of a million people just 60 kilometres away
from the crash site -- AFP journalists heard several explosions and saw several
damaged buildings.
Heavy
fighting was also ongoing in another rebel stronghold Lugansk where local
authorities reported five killed and eight wounded in the past 24 hours.
More than
1,100 people have been killed in the fighting in the past three months, the
United Nations said.
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